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countable and uncountable, plural presuppositions
An assumption made beforehand; a preliminary conjecture or speculation. quotations examples
He made one cardinal error in his presuppositions about the relation between language and perception, but in this he was far from alone.
2010, Guy Deutscher, Through the Language Glass, Arrow, published 2011, page 40
The act of presupposing. examples
(linguistics) An assumption or belief implicit in an utterance or other use of language. quotations examples
For instance: a verb might convey someone's evaluation of it as a presupposition. To say ‘they deprived him of a visit to his parents’ presupposes that he wanted to visit (vs. ‘spare him a visit...’).
1971, Paul Kiparsky, Carol Kiparsky, “Fact”, in Danny Steinberg, Leon Jakobovits, editors, Semantics: An Interdisciplinary Reader in Philosophy, Linguistics and Psychology, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, page 351